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Hypoxia Primes Human ISCs for Interleukin-Dependent Rescue of Stem Cell Activity

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Hypoxia in the intestinal epithelium can be caused by acute ischemic events or chronic inflammation in which immune cell infiltration produces inflammatory hypoxia starving the mucosa of oxygen. The epithelium has the capacity to regenerate after some ischemic and inflammatory c...

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Autores principales: Rivera, Kristina R., Bliton, R. Jarrett, Burclaff, Joseph, Czerwinski, Michael J., Liu, Jintong, Trueblood, Jessica M., Hinesley, Caroline M., Breau, Keith A., Deal, Halston E., Joshi, Shlok, Pozdin, Vladimir A., Yao, Ming, Ziegler, Amanda L., Blikslager, Anthony T., Daniele, Michael A., Magness, Scott T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10520368/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37562653
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcmgh.2023.07.012
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author Rivera, Kristina R.
Bliton, R. Jarrett
Burclaff, Joseph
Czerwinski, Michael J.
Liu, Jintong
Trueblood, Jessica M.
Hinesley, Caroline M.
Breau, Keith A.
Deal, Halston E.
Joshi, Shlok
Pozdin, Vladimir A.
Yao, Ming
Ziegler, Amanda L.
Blikslager, Anthony T.
Daniele, Michael A.
Magness, Scott T.
author_facet Rivera, Kristina R.
Bliton, R. Jarrett
Burclaff, Joseph
Czerwinski, Michael J.
Liu, Jintong
Trueblood, Jessica M.
Hinesley, Caroline M.
Breau, Keith A.
Deal, Halston E.
Joshi, Shlok
Pozdin, Vladimir A.
Yao, Ming
Ziegler, Amanda L.
Blikslager, Anthony T.
Daniele, Michael A.
Magness, Scott T.
author_sort Rivera, Kristina R.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Hypoxia in the intestinal epithelium can be caused by acute ischemic events or chronic inflammation in which immune cell infiltration produces inflammatory hypoxia starving the mucosa of oxygen. The epithelium has the capacity to regenerate after some ischemic and inflammatory conditions suggesting that intestinal stem cells (ISCs) are highly tolerant to acute and chronic hypoxia; however, the impact of hypoxia on human ISC (hISC) function has not been reported. Here we present a new microphysiological system (MPS) to investigate how hypoxia affects hISCs from healthy donors and test the hypothesis that prolonged hypoxia modulates how hISCs respond to inflammation-associated interleukins (ILs). METHODS: hISCs were exposed to <1.0% oxygen in the MPS for 6, 24, 48, and 72 hours. Viability, hypoxia-inducible factor 1a (HIF1a) response, transcriptomics, cell cycle dynamics, and response to cytokines were evaluated in hISCs under hypoxia. HIF stabilizers and inhibitors were screened to evaluate HIF-dependent responses. RESULTS: The MPS enables precise, real-time control and monitoring of oxygen levels at the cell surface. Under hypoxia, hISCs maintain viability until 72 hours and exhibit peak HIF1a at 24 hours. hISC activity was reduced at 24 hours but recovered at 48 hours. Hypoxia induced increases in the proportion of hISCs in G1 and expression changes in 16 IL receptors. Prolyl hydroxylase inhibition failed to reproduce hypoxia-dependent IL-receptor expression patterns. hISC activity increased when treated IL1β, IL2, IL4, IL6, IL10, IL13, and IL25 and rescued hISC activity caused by 24 hours of hypoxia. CONCLUSIONS: Hypoxia pushes hISCs into a dormant but reversible proliferative state and primes hISCs to respond to a subset of ILs that preserves hISC activity. These findings have important implications for understanding intestinal epithelial regeneration mechanisms caused by inflammatory hypoxia.
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spelling pubmed-105203682023-09-27 Hypoxia Primes Human ISCs for Interleukin-Dependent Rescue of Stem Cell Activity Rivera, Kristina R. Bliton, R. Jarrett Burclaff, Joseph Czerwinski, Michael J. Liu, Jintong Trueblood, Jessica M. Hinesley, Caroline M. Breau, Keith A. Deal, Halston E. Joshi, Shlok Pozdin, Vladimir A. Yao, Ming Ziegler, Amanda L. Blikslager, Anthony T. Daniele, Michael A. Magness, Scott T. Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol Original Research BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Hypoxia in the intestinal epithelium can be caused by acute ischemic events or chronic inflammation in which immune cell infiltration produces inflammatory hypoxia starving the mucosa of oxygen. The epithelium has the capacity to regenerate after some ischemic and inflammatory conditions suggesting that intestinal stem cells (ISCs) are highly tolerant to acute and chronic hypoxia; however, the impact of hypoxia on human ISC (hISC) function has not been reported. Here we present a new microphysiological system (MPS) to investigate how hypoxia affects hISCs from healthy donors and test the hypothesis that prolonged hypoxia modulates how hISCs respond to inflammation-associated interleukins (ILs). METHODS: hISCs were exposed to <1.0% oxygen in the MPS for 6, 24, 48, and 72 hours. Viability, hypoxia-inducible factor 1a (HIF1a) response, transcriptomics, cell cycle dynamics, and response to cytokines were evaluated in hISCs under hypoxia. HIF stabilizers and inhibitors were screened to evaluate HIF-dependent responses. RESULTS: The MPS enables precise, real-time control and monitoring of oxygen levels at the cell surface. Under hypoxia, hISCs maintain viability until 72 hours and exhibit peak HIF1a at 24 hours. hISC activity was reduced at 24 hours but recovered at 48 hours. Hypoxia induced increases in the proportion of hISCs in G1 and expression changes in 16 IL receptors. Prolyl hydroxylase inhibition failed to reproduce hypoxia-dependent IL-receptor expression patterns. hISC activity increased when treated IL1β, IL2, IL4, IL6, IL10, IL13, and IL25 and rescued hISC activity caused by 24 hours of hypoxia. CONCLUSIONS: Hypoxia pushes hISCs into a dormant but reversible proliferative state and primes hISCs to respond to a subset of ILs that preserves hISC activity. These findings have important implications for understanding intestinal epithelial regeneration mechanisms caused by inflammatory hypoxia. Elsevier 2023-08-09 /pmc/articles/PMC10520368/ /pubmed/37562653 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcmgh.2023.07.012 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Research
Rivera, Kristina R.
Bliton, R. Jarrett
Burclaff, Joseph
Czerwinski, Michael J.
Liu, Jintong
Trueblood, Jessica M.
Hinesley, Caroline M.
Breau, Keith A.
Deal, Halston E.
Joshi, Shlok
Pozdin, Vladimir A.
Yao, Ming
Ziegler, Amanda L.
Blikslager, Anthony T.
Daniele, Michael A.
Magness, Scott T.
Hypoxia Primes Human ISCs for Interleukin-Dependent Rescue of Stem Cell Activity
title Hypoxia Primes Human ISCs for Interleukin-Dependent Rescue of Stem Cell Activity
title_full Hypoxia Primes Human ISCs for Interleukin-Dependent Rescue of Stem Cell Activity
title_fullStr Hypoxia Primes Human ISCs for Interleukin-Dependent Rescue of Stem Cell Activity
title_full_unstemmed Hypoxia Primes Human ISCs for Interleukin-Dependent Rescue of Stem Cell Activity
title_short Hypoxia Primes Human ISCs for Interleukin-Dependent Rescue of Stem Cell Activity
title_sort hypoxia primes human iscs for interleukin-dependent rescue of stem cell activity
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10520368/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37562653
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcmgh.2023.07.012
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